* Market's attention focuses on Friday's U.S. payroll report
* Technicals signal oil to retreat towards $88 [
]* Coming Up: Initial U.S. jobless claims; 1330 GMT (Updates with revised U.S. nonfarm payrolls estimate, prices)
By Alejandro Barbajosa
SINGAPORE, Jan 6 (Reuters) - Oil held above $90 on Thursday as upbeat private U.S. payroll data helped markets recover from a mid-week slump on expectations for a sustained economic recovery at the world's top crude consuming nation.
U.S. crude for February <CLc1> added 15 cents to $90.45 a barrel at 0733 GMT after earlier trading as high as $90.71.
Prices touched a 27-month high of $92.58 in the first trading day of the year and tumbled to as low as $88.10 on Wednesday, before rebounding with the payroll data.
"It's general optimism about the commodity market because of pretty good data coming out of the United States," said Mark Pervan, a senior commodities analyst at ANZ in Melbourne.
"There's some volatility related to the strength of the dollar, but the market is certainly getting positive for demand."
Traders were looking for monthly U.S. government data on Friday to confirm the increase in payrolls reported by processing company ADP Employer Services on Wednesday.
Private employers added 297,000 jobs last month, ADP said, the largest gain on ADP records dating to 2000. U.S. nonfarm payrolls probably increased by 175,000 in December, according to a revised Reuters poll, up from the previous pre-ADP 140,000 forecast. [
]Friday's non-farm payrolls report "will finish it off," Pervan said. "The likelihood is that we will see a pretty good number."
Oil fell early on Wednesday after suffering the biggest single-day drop since mid-November a day earlier as the dollar strengthened. An appreciation of the greenback typically weighs on commodities as they become more expensive for buyers using other currencies.
But a larger-than-expected drop in U.S. crude inventories last week also bolstered prices. Inventories fell by 4.16 million barrels in the final week of 2010, according to a weekly report from the Energy Information Administration on Wednesday.
Over the past five weeks, U.S. crude inventories have fallen by more than 24 million barrels, their biggest five-week decline since mid-2008, reducing a surplus that has prevailed for the past two years. Oil companies traditionally reduce U.S. crude inventories at the end of the year for tax purposes.
Still, gasoline stockpiles rose about 11 times as much as expected, adding 3.29 million barrels, while distillate stocks also climbed by a larger-than-expected 1.15 million barrels, according to the EIA.
Crude inventories at the key Cushing, Oklahoma hub rose 858,000 barrels to 37.49 million barrels, helping depress the value of U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) relative to European marker Brent.
Front-month ICE Brent futures traded at a premium of about $5 a barrel to the equivalent WTI contract. ICE Brent for February <LCOc1> shed 7 cents to $95.43.
A chemical plant fire at the Dutch Moerdijk industrial zone which affected shipping traffic in Europe's busy Rotterdam-Antwerp ports also boosted Brent relative to U.S. crude. The fire did not impact Royal Dutch Shell's oil refinery there. [
]In other markets, Japanese stocks rallied as investors snapped up shares of big exporters after the dollar hit two-week highs against the yen, but markets elsewhere in Asia were more subdued ahead of the influential U.S. non-farm payrolls report.
The ADP payroll figures also ignited a broad commodities rebound on Wednesday, a day after prices fell their most in seven weeks.
Analysts said optimism that the U.S. economy was recovering more quickly than thought boosted the demand outlook for commodities, which finished 2010 as the top asset class. (Editing by Himani Sarkar)